Workout Of The Week: Tempo Trials

Photo: www.shutterstock.com


Tactical training warfare meets blitzkrieg.


Nowadays, most distance runners — even 800-meter specialists — regularly incorporate tempo runs into their training, either during pre-competitive phases or year-round. Alternatively called lactate-threshold runs or anaerobic-threshold runs, these are workouts done at a pace you could hold for about one hour going all-out, and typically range from about 20 minutes in duration for track and shorter-distance specialists to 40 or more minutes for seasoned marathoners.


It’s also not uncommon for specialists at various distances to perform time trials, either at the beginning of a training bout to establish baseline fitness or as a goal race looms to engender confidence and mimic competitive conditions. There are close to all-out in terms of intensity, but in most cases are limited to about two-thirds of the goal event distance.


RELATED:  Know Your Tempo


Taking a close look at each of these types of sessions invites what seems an obvious question: Is there any way to combine these efforts into a single workout, and if so, does such a workout serve a useful purpose? The answers are yes and yes.


The post Workout Of The Week: Tempo Trials appeared first on Competitor.com.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 12, 2016 09:33
No comments have been added yet.


Ryan Hall's Blog

Ryan Hall
Ryan Hall isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Ryan Hall's blog with rss.